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I've seen several examples on how to retrieve and remove strings between delimiters. However, I created a very simple test case and I'm getting the wrong output based on various examples. Why am I getting back the string I'd like to use as the search source instead of the string I'm searching?

String temp = "56.0 F (13.3C)";
String exp = "((^))";
String p = temp.replace(exp, "");
System.out.println("p=" + p); 

I get the string 56.0F (13.3C) as my output.

I am expecting to get 56.0F back.

I also tried to use the pattern matcher:

Pattern pattern = Pattern.compile(exp);
Matcher matcher = pattern.matcher(temp);
if (matcher.find()) {
    System.out.println(matcher.groupCount());
    for (int i=0; i<=matcher.groupCount(); i++) {
        String groupStr = matcher.group(i);
        System.out.println(groupStr);
    }
}

2 is what's printed to the console

Any ideas as to what I'm doing wrong? I've been looking at this now for a couple of hours. Thanks!

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2 Answers 2

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It is returning the string because it could not do any replacements.

Try using \(.*?\) or \([^)]*\) to match the portion of the string surrounded by parenthesis inclusive.

If you want it to optionally eat up surrounding whitespace, put a \s* either side of the regex, or do a trim on the result.

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  • Thanks alex, this works perfectly now (except I had to use the \\ escape sequence before the left and right parenthesis: \(.*?\). Oct 26, 2011 at 2:29
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Your first example prints the original string because the replace() method doesn't perform a regex replacement. It's trying to replace the literal string ((^)), which of course is not present.

However, you would have gotten the same result if you had used replaceAll() or replaceFirst(). The ^ in your regex is a zero-width assertion; it doesn't consume any characters, it just anchors the match to the beginning of the string. The result I would expect to see from your second example is

> 56.0F (13.3C)
>
>

In other words, the whole string (group(0)) and two empty strings (group(1) and group(2)). That's because both sets of parens are interpreted as capturing groups. If you want to match the (literal) parentheses and their contents, you can use:

String exp = "\\(.*?\\)";

...or even better:

String exp = "\\([^()]*\\)";

There's no need to use capturing groups at all.

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